Global and Women's Health, Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 12;16(1):e0245186. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245186. eCollection 2021.
Optimal mental health underpins full social participation. As people age, they confront personal and cultural challenges, the effects of which on mental health are not fully understood. The aim of this research was to learn from women of the Baby Boomer generation (born 1946-1964) what contributes to and hinders their mental health and wellbeing. Eighteen women participated in qualitative interviews (in English); data were analysed thematically. Participants were located across Australia in rural and urban areas; not all were born in Australia. They were diverse in education, employment status, and experiences of life and ageing. The women nominated as the main contributors to poor mental health in older women Illness and disability, Financial insecurity, Maltreatment, and Loss and grief. Contributors to good mental health were identified as Social interdependence, Feeling valued, Physical activity, Good nutrition, and Having faith or belief. Women's accounts supplied other influences on mental health, both associated with the person (Personality and Intimate relationships and sex) and with society (Constructs of ageing, Gender, and Culture). Women also specified what they needed from others in order to improve their mental health as they aged: Public education about ageing, Purposeful roles for older women in society, Adequate services and resources, and Sensitive health care. In sum, older women wanted to be treated with respect and for their lives to have meaning. It is evident from these results that circumstances throughout life can have profound influences on women's mental health in older age. Anti-discriminatory policies, informed and inclusive health care, and social structures that support and enhance the lives of girls and women at all ages will therefore benefit older women and increase the potential for their continuing contribution to society. These conclusions have implications for policy and practice in well-resourced countries.
心理健康是全面参与社会的基础。随着年龄的增长,人们会面临个人和文化方面的挑战,但其对心理健康的影响尚不完全清楚。本研究旨在了解婴儿潮一代(1946-1964 年出生)女性的哪些因素有助于她们的心理健康和福祉,以及哪些因素会对其造成阻碍。18 名女性参与了定性访谈(英文);数据进行了主题分析。参与者分布在澳大利亚各地的农村和城市地区;并非所有人都在澳大利亚出生。她们在教育、就业状况以及生活和老龄化经历方面各不相同。女性认为导致老年女性心理健康状况不佳的主要因素有:疾病和残疾、经济不安全、虐待和丧失、悲伤。促进心理健康的因素包括:社会依存、有价值感、身体活动、良好的营养和信仰。女性还提供了其他对心理健康有影响的因素,包括个人因素(人格和亲密关系与性)和社会因素(老龄化观念、性别和文化)。女性还具体说明了她们在年老时需要他人提供哪些帮助来改善自己的心理健康:关于老龄化的公共教育、社会赋予老年女性有意义的角色、充足的服务和资源、以及敏感的医疗保健。总之,老年女性希望受到尊重,希望自己的生活有意义。这些结果表明,一生中的各种情况都会对女性晚年的心理健康产生深远影响。因此,反歧视政策、知情和包容的医疗保健以及支持和增强女孩和女性在所有年龄段生活的社会结构将使老年女性受益,并增加她们继续为社会做出贡献的潜力。这些结论对资源丰富国家的政策和实践具有启示意义。